According to Sea Shepherd, their ships have chased the Japanese scientific whaling vessels since they arrived in the Southern Ocean on Jan. 28, crossing 6,240 miles of territory westward, and with two direct confrontations between the warring groups to prevent the killing of whales.

The Sea Shepherd group also attempted to prevent the " illegal fueling of the Nisshin Maru from the Sun Laurel."

Last year, Japanese whalers killed 267 whales, but this year, managed to kill "no more than 75," according to AFP — failing to reach their target of 935 Minke whales and up to 50 fin whales set by the Japanese Institute for Cetecean Research.

The public confrontation between the whalers and Sea Shepherd's environmentalists have made international headlines since the whalers first set a course for the Southern Ocean, with both sides claiming that the other has taken violent actions.

The Japanese government heavily subsidizes the whaling fleet with over $320 million since 1987 at cost to the taxpayer, an earlier GlobalPost report noted, while Japanese consumption of whale meat continues to plummet.

50 percent of Japanese surveyed said they had no opinion on the whaling practice, while 26 percent were in support and 18.5 percent opposed.

Despite condemnation from Australia and international environmental groups, Japanese minister for agriculture, forestry and fisheries Yoshimasa Hayashi said that he didn't "think there will be any kind of an end for whaling by Japan," according to CNN, noting Japan's long history and tradition of whaling.